Clinton Crime Family - Nevada Connections - Voter Registration Fraud - O'Keefe's undercover video shows lawyer Christina Gupana stacking the illegal voters deck for Hillary Clinton. The idea is to get hundreds of thousands of illegal aliens to vote for Hillary Clinton, the Clinton Crime Family has once again been the subject of illegal actions. Grandma Clinton is now the leader of the Clinton Crime Family facing RICO charges.
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Nevada attorney Christina Gupana, who is managing voter-registration efforts for the Clinton campaign in the key state of Nevada, was the unwitting star of O’Keefe’s undercover sting video this week. Gupana was caught on film apparently conspiring to violate election laws.
James O’Keefe strikes again. The
Project Veritas Action video appears to show an undercover investigator,
wearing a hidden camera, capturing several potentially self-incriminating
conversations by several individuals working with Hillary Clinton’s
presidential campaign.
Much of the
eight-minute video focuses on Christina Gupana, a licensed Nevada attorney, who
apparently manages the campaign’s efforts to register voters. In one
discussion, Gupana instructs individuals who appear to be the staffers and
volunteers, “Do whatever you can. Whatever you can get away with, just do it,
until you get kicked out, like totally.”
These seem to
reference electioneering tactics, which could be a serious matter. Much of the
video concerns Clinton campaign operatives registering voters. This can be done
legally only if a county clerk in Nevada appoints that person as a field
registrar, which imposes strict legal duties upon that person. Under Nevada Revised Statute
293.505(10), while registering a voter, a field registrar shall not:
(a) Solicit a
vote for or against a particular question or candidate;
(b) Speak to a
voter on the subject of marking his or her ballot for or against a particular
question or candidate; or
(c) Distribute
any petition or other material concerning a candidate or question which will be
on the ballot for the ensuing election.
But one clip
appears to show campaign workers doing exactly that, showing a man the video
identifies as Phillip Kim, allegedly a paid campaign operative, telling a
voter, “I would say Hillary is your girl. You should go for a Democrat.” He
immediately adds a disclaimer, saying, “But I can’t tell you one way or the
other, that’s not my job.” However, the disclaimer does not undo what the video
shows Kim just did—soliciting a vote for Hillary Clinton and telling a voter
that she should mark her ballot for a Democrat. If done in connection with
voter registration activity, those words would appear to violate the statute.
Another clip
shows a man identified as Harrison Lee, who says he and another campaign
operative “got kicked out” from in front of a public library, because they
“can’t push HRC, Hillary, in front of the library.” He can be heard explaining
that he had a campaign sign along with a voter registration sign at a
registration table. “I had been doing that for a couple weeks,” Lee adds.
Regarding another
incident, Lee says, “Like at a library or the DMV, we had been able to get away
with asking the Hillary question after voter registration, for a long time.”
The phrase “asking the question” is likely a reference to soliciting support
from a voter.
Still another
clip captures a man the video identifies as Henry Engelstein, regaling other
campaign workers with his account of an encounter he claims to have had with a
librarian who had come out with a law book because she “thought we were doing
partisan voter registration”—that is, registration activities combined with
soliciting support for Hillary Clinton, or for Democrats in general—reading the
Nevada statute to them regarding what activities they cannot engage in while
registering voters.
At this point, according
to the video, Gupana can be heard weighing in, asking, “Wait, so what did she
see, the caucus cards?” That could be a reference to a voter commitment card,
which is partisan campaign literature asking for the voter to commit to
supporting one particular candidate—here, Hillary Clinton—in Nevada’s
Democratic presidential caucus, which will be held on February 20, 2016.
Distributing such
material might violate § 293.505(10)(c), and asking someone to make that
commitment might violate § 293.505(10)(a). When the worker clarifies that the
material consisted instead of Hillary campaign signs and related materials to
persuade voters to support Hillary, Gupana responds, “You should just hide all
that stuff.”
Under Nevada law,
NRS 293.505(15) specifies that any violation of this law is a Class E felony in
that state, which can carry one to four years of prison time, plus separate
civil fines of up to $20,000. Several of the activities captured or referenced
in the video may constitute violations of the law, and if so, then it appears
possible that an attorney with the campaign may have been encouraging the
commission of illegal acts to advance Hillary Clinton’s candidacy.
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